Monday, September 2, 2019
Girls Of Slender Means :: essays research papers
   Joanna’s and Jane’s lifestyles.     Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  The Girls of Slender Means by Murial Spark is a novel  about the girls who lived in the May of Teck Club during the  year of 1945. There are many characters involved, but the  one’s who caught my attention the most are Jane Wright and  Joanna Childe. They represent different aspects of ideas,  lifestyles and, also, have different perspectives on the  “World of Books.';Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Joanna Childe was the daughter of a country rector. She  was very intelligent, had “...strong obscure emotions'; (8),  and “...religious strength'; (165). She was very well  build. “Joanna Childe was large...'; (9), “... fair and  healthy-looking...'; (22). She had light shiny hair, blue  eyes and deep-pink cheeks. She never used a scrap of  make-up because she didn’t really care about her looks and  she wasn’t looking for a husband either.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Jane Wright, on the other hand, was very fat and felt  miserable about it. She tried to blame her work for her  appetite. “...[she] was miserable about her fatness and  spent much of her time in eager dread of the next meal, and  in making resolutions what to eat of it and what to leave,  and in making counter-resolutions in view of the fact   that her work at the publisher’s was essentially mental,  which meant that her brain had to be fed more than most  people’s'; (35-36). Unlike Joanna, Jane “...was on the  look-out for a husband,...'; (32) since she was only twenty  two years old.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Joanna’s and Jane’s occupations evolved around the  world of books. However, they had different perspectives  about it. Jane worked for a publisher and Joanna attended  a school of drama to be a teacher of elocution. Jane  thought of the publishing business as “...essentially  disinterest[ing]'; (39), while Joanna chose her profession  because of her love for poetry. “...poetry, especially the  declamatory sort, excited her and possessed her; she would  pounce on the stuff, play with it quivering in her mind, and  when she had got it by heart, she spoke it forth with  devouring relish'; (8). Joanna was highly thought of for it  and Jane “...was considered to be brainy but somewhat below  standard, socially, at the May of Teck'; (19).   Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Both women were similar in that they did additional  work besides the one’s mentioned above. Joanna had students  of her own whom she taught how to speak properly, with no  accent. “Joanna’s method was to read each stanza herself  first and make her pupil repeat it.'; (21). Jane had several  kinds of “...brain-work'; (41). “First and secretly, she  wrote poetry of a strictly non-rational order, in which  occurred, in about proportion of cherries in a cherry-cake,  certain words that she described as ‘of a smouldering    					    
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